Flix

Social media may help curb HIV spread

Written by : TNM

The News Minute | October 30 2014 | 4:35 pm ISTIn addition to providing other potential benefits to public health, all of those tweets and Facebook posts could help curb the spread of HIV, finds a study.Insights gleaned from social media could be used to help governments, public health departments, hospitals and caretakers monitor people's health behaviours "to know where, when, and how we might be able to prevent HIV transmission", the study proposed."We know that mining social media will have huge potential benefits for many areas of medicine in the future," said Sean Young from University of California, Los Angeles.Social media with right tools in place offers a rich source of psychological and health-related data generated in an environment in which people are often willing to share freely, Young said.People who discussed HIV prevention topics on social media were more than twice as likely to later request an HIV test, found the study.In the context of HIV prevention, tweets have also been shown to identify people who are currently or soon to engage in sexual or drug-related risk behaviours.Those tweets can be mapped to particular locations and related to actual HIV trends, the study said."Since people are already getting used to the fact that corporations are doing this, we should at least support public health researchers in using these same methods to try and improve our health and well being," Young concluded.The study appeared in the journal Trends in Microbiology.IANS

image

In Holenarsipura, Deve Gowda family’s dominance ensures no one questions Prajwal

A decade lost: How LGBTQIA+ rights fared under BJP govt and the way forward

JD(S) leader alleges Prajwal Revanna threatened with gun, sexually assaulted her for 3 years

Telangana police closes Rohith Vemula file, absolves former V-C and BJP leaders

Who spread unblurred videos of women? SIT probe on Prajwal Revanna must find